258 THE WEST SHORE. September, 1879 At we look northward again at Mt. spreading, fragrant coronals dot the Adan, we Me that it stands isolated irrassvpark. Through the eastern edge f rom its brotherhood of mountains, of it, the river, with an average width Unlike Hood, which itandi right on of fifty feet, a current broken constantly the main ridge of the mountains, Ad ams has been severed from all connect inn rid get. The backbone of the Cascade range li.i-' apparently been torn asunder at this point, anil the shattered vertebra- piled in Adams and St. Helen. The former, shaggy and massive, bound with chains of stiffened lava anil beaded w Ith half-melted boulders, seems ust mi the verge of boiling forth again. The latter, smooth and symmetrical, has vailed the old volcanic strife be neath 1 mantle of the purest mow. The pilgrim to Mt. Adams lands at White Salmon on the sand, into which the strainer hutts head-first with force enough to bold her during the few mo ments of her Stay. Then with an im path nt SnOft, she backs oflf and hounds I all s .ml. White Salmon, with its peaches and tomatoes, lifts the physical man to a point Commensurate with the elevated task belbre him, while its pine groves ami curiously carved rocks form a tit vestibule to the majestic temple in Which he is about to worship. I n entyflve milt - on the hacks of horsoa obtained fot money, not tor love, bungs us to (.'amas l'rairie. There would Ik- nhotit as much sense, hv the way, in naming every other hill on this sale the Mountains, Pit hill, as there is in laslcnii.g upon every other prairie on the othei tide, the odious appellation Ol Camas. ( hn people should ecu isc S little more ingenuity in christening linn homes. Prom this prairie, which is 1 lie ptimipal feature ol the hv rapids, as cold as ice from the snows of the mountain right above us, makes ils sw ift and noisy way. Havinfe followed the river for a dis tance of four miles, we begin the ascent of the long ridge leading to the sum mit. This ridge has the same lawn like beauty as the valley helow. Flowers of all colors variagate the rich green of the grass. The mountain itself, with alternate streaks of snow and rock, is constantly visible through the trees. The grass becomes smaller and fresher, the trees hecome dwarfed, and the soil ashy. Then an ice-cold little creek, hahling on the chunks of basalt that have been thrown down from their high station above. Pretty soon a smutty snow-hank appears amid the tree-. Beyond this is a little valley, which the architect of this mountain must have designed expressly for camp ing parties, a perfect oval, embracing about three acres, fringed with minia ture hemlocks and traversed by the little stream, this charming spot has yet one dreadful plague mosquitoes I They say that every house has its skeleton, and there seems to be no mountain retreat where persecuted man can he free from all articulated pests. Let us draw a vail over the piercing experiences of that night. Indeed, we made strenuous efforts to draw vails over ourselves nt the time, hut to no avail whatever. The hills of our tormentors made light of all de fense. There w as a definite line of at tack arranged between mosquitoes and upper gnats, i K. mosquitoes covered us as Klukit.it, pafMin can make almost a j thickly as their size would permit, and OOnplete plot of his course up the then the gnats tilled all the interstices, mountain. Time aie time summits, after which both varieties of animal ranging li"in northwest to southeast, gorged themselves. From the tout booster!) of these, e tends a long rock) ridge, dividing the it........ .1... 1 . ..,.. v., tmwi me lances 01 the lli.llwl MMB I.,.. I I . .. ...II-.. 1.-I- LI. . . ..... " " " M,S ". o, ,h rsiKM.an.omtha.o. the eai.h and the gentle, touch of the I U m M0a had cooled its fever, the attentions of Crossing the loot ot this ridge, we our tuneful adversaries became les antM again the valley of t)u. V,iU. pointed, and by the time the starlight Salmon. A lH-autilul scene awaits , had liegun to sparkle on the frosted V.. I i - 1 1 r 1 1. hi the vallcv cvp.inds to a width of sV Itrctchcd out its long lingers and half creeps lown the black and chilly cl.tw cral miles. It j, parptUd w ith the! throttled the murmuring creek we which once were hissing hot. A hug green, .! giass, and brighter.. flower., "etc left in h;.cc. island of basalt which has survived the ( 1. .. ....it. . .1 . . . . L. I rt. . .. . mmmnn .l..v .O'.ll .lanJi IfllltltflV l!tt' " r"" Miaigiiij me morning light revealed a Ion Z ' ,"V - , ,- ,ta Uicciii Lolumiv in.l wild .. i 1 1 11 . ""'pwawti almost the only barnertotoa 1 ' ' ",,! " K '"n 1 '.ldci, tanging i sire I general congelation. ' from a man's fist to a piano. This stairway extends, with n few fow ruptions, to the first summit of the mountain. The boulders of which it is composed, look as if they had been half melted and then stuck together, They furnish a much less wearisome road than the slippery snew-fields. Mt. Adams has a much wider base than I Iood. It is fully five miles, if not more, from the snow-line to the sum mit. It is quite possible, however, that the snow limits are greater this year than usual. These five miles furnish no dangerous climbs along the edge of fathomless ice-creeks as Hood does, nor does one seem so near the infernal re gions as on the latter mountain. A faint sulphurous odor is noticeable at one or two points, but it is faint indeed compared wit!, the brimstone breath of Hood. Nor .do the rocks go booming into the crevices at a slight touch as on Hood. Though neither so upright nor so holy as our great Oregon peak, ML Adams is much, better regulated, and altogether graver. Almost any o'ie of good lung and leg capacity, and of av erage moral character, can attain the summit of Adams. The toppling crest of Hood is reserved for the stout thighed few whose battle-cry is "Ex celsior." Our long rock-stairway of many thousand steps terminates in the south eastern peak of the mountain. The central dome is about three hundred feet higher and half a mile further. Midway between the two is a beautiful snow-field, which terminates on the northeastern side in a tremendous preci pice, over which hangs a frozen Ni agara. That cataract, with its grcea waters above, its black depths Inrlow, and the foam-flecked, rainbow-girdled' flood between, with its perpetual smoke of mist and its roar and rumble from the under-world, is a revelation of sub limity which reduces man to a mere atom. Here on Mt. Adams, at the other end of the continent, is the ghost of the great waterfall. With a invc ment apparent only to the eye that sec it always, with a silence that is more awful than the loudest noise, the great ice-fall, of mingled green and white,